Ex-Trump aide Hope Hicks agrees to hand campaign documents to Congress

Published Jun 5, 2019

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Washington - Former White House

Communications Director Hope Hicks, once a close aide to

President Donald Trump, has agreed to turn over documents

related to his 2016 election campaign to congressional

investigators, a top Democratic lawmaker said on Tuesday.

The agreement marks a step forward for House of

Representatives Judiciary Committee Chairman Jerrold Nadler in

investigations of Republican Trump and his inner circle, digging

into the campaign, his turbulent presidency and business

interests.

Hicks, Trump's former campaign press secretary, agreed to

supply the documents from the campaign, despite a White House

directive advising her not to provide the committee with

material from her subsequent time at the White House.

She and former White House lawyer Annie Donaldson were

subpoenaed on May 21 by the panel as part of its inquiry into

whether Trump obstructed Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s

investigation into Russian interference in the 2016 election and

contacts between Trump's campaign and Moscow.

Hicks' attorney Robert Trout said in a letter to Nadler that

Hicks would not hand over documents related to Trump's time in

the White House and his presidential transition period because

administration attorneys believe the papers may be subject to a

claim of executive privilege by Trump.

Trout said Hicks was handing over a computer disc containing

documents from Trump's campaign period that were not previously

given to the committee.

He said his law firm would not provide any documents it had

received from the White House and transition team to prepare

Hicks for her testimony before congressional committees or

Mueller's investigation.

The White House instructed Hicks and Donaldson not to turn

over records related to the administration, saying the material

involves executive branch confidentiality interests and

executive privilege. Hicks resigned from her White House job in

February 2018.

The two former aides "do not have the legal right to

disclose the White House records to third parties," White House

counsel Pat Cipollone said in a letter to Nadler.

A copy of a letter from Attorney General William Barr advising Congress of the principal conclusions reached by special counsel Robert Mueller is photographed in Washington. File picture: Jon Elswick/AP

'GOOD FAITH'

Nadler commended Hicks for providing "some documents"

relating to the campaign.

"I thank her for that show of good faith," Nadler said in a

statement. The Democrat criticized what he called Trump's

"continued obstruction of Congress."

Nadler said: "The president has no lawful basis for

preventing these witnesses from complying with our request."

The committee chairman told reporters that Hicks and

Donaldson, a former aide to ex-White House counsel Don McGahn,

could face contempt proceedings if they do not comply.

"When we ask for documents to be turned over, we expect all

of the documents to be turned over. We're the Congress of the

United States," said Representative Jamie Raskin, a Democrat on

Nadler's committee.

"The president and the White House continue to play games.

It's not a game," Raskin said.

Donaldson did not respond to requests for comment.

The House of Representatives is poised to vote on a contempt

resolution against Attorney General William Barr, who defied a

Judiciary Committee subpoena for the unredacted Mueller report.

A vote has been scheduled for June 11.

On Tuesday, the Justice Department offered to move forward

on negotiations about the Mueller report only if lawmakers cut

short their drive to hold Barr in contempt.

Nadler rejected that request in a letter to Barr later in

the day, urging the attorney general to return to negotiations

without conditions and saying there was "simply no justification

for your refusal."

The committee is seeking any material Hicks has on a June

2016 meeting at Trump Tower in New York between campaign

officials including the president's son Donald Trump Jr. and

son-in-law Jared Kushner and Russians offering to help Trump's

candidacy.

The subpoena also seeks documents relating to any payments

made to Trump's convicted former personal lawyer Michael Cohen.

Cohen said Trump directed "hush money" payments he made for two

women's silence before the election about their alleged sexual

relations with Trump.

Representative Doug Collins, top Republican on the House

Judiciary Committee, called for hearings on Russian meddling in

the 2016 campaign and potential foreign threats to the 2020

race, a move Nadler said he welcomed.

The committee has scheduled separate hearings with Hicks and

Donaldson for later this month. It is also seeking documents

from the two former aides on dozens of topics ranging from an

FBI investigation into former national security adviser Michael

Flynn to the termination of James Comey as FBI director and the

appointment of Mueller. 

Reuters

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